Refugee Class Warfare: EU Favoring Syrians to Africans?

The fate of Syrian refugees is making the headlines nowadays and raises questions about the future of pan-European migration policy. In a way it's a reprise of monetary policy, asking whether a singular migration regime suits countries varying in demographics, development, and the ability to welcome migrants. One of the notable things about Syrian refugees is that many of them are quite technology-savvy, with an article noting how adept they are at using smartphones to find their way if and when they reach Europe and to find relatives already there:

As thousands of refugees and migrants move across Europe,
many are making use of technology in order to make their journey safer
and share life-or-death information. The migrants, many of whom are from Syria,
displaced by the civil war, as well as Afghanistan and Eritrea, are
using smartphones to keep in contact with relatives and each other,
while using GPS to find their way around Europe.

According to Paul Donohoe, from the International
Rescue Committee (IRC), a large number of refugees have smartphones,
which are proving to be a vital resource. "If they lose their phone, that's quite a
challenge," explained Donohoe, speaking to CNBC. "They have to get a new
one so they can communicate with their family."

Contrast their plight to that of Africans landing on Europe's shores. The conflicts that have driven them to foreign lands are no less violent, but media and world attention is more closely tracking the Syrian civil war. Actually, Africans are often worse off than the Syrians, with no cell phones or any possessions for that matter if and when they reach European shores. Is it racism that explains the difference? Some suggest this may be the case:

Far different from the Syrians clambering
off boats in Greece, the Africans land in Sicily penniless and
empty-handed. When I ask to see what they carried with them, most look
puzzled, then point to the clothes on their back. “I arrived with
nothing, not even my documents,” said Mandjo, 16, from Guinea, who fled
when religious violence destroyed his village. What little he grabbed as
he fled was lost to bandits along the way.

Now, the plight of African refugees like
Mandjo risks getting lost amid the Syrian refugee crisis in Europe, aid
officials say. “It’s important to us that Europe is now beginning to
talk about opening their borders and welcoming refugees,” says Giovanna
Di Benedetto of Save the Children in Sicily. “But it is not only Syrians
who have to be welcomed.”

To underscore her point, Di Benedetto
whips out her iPhone to show me photos of dead African infants whose
bodies washed ashore on a beach off Zuwara, Libya on August 28, when
their smugglers’ boat capsized. About 200 people drowned when the ship overturned.

Five days later, a photo on a beach off Bodrum, Turkey showed another dead toddler: Aylan Kurdi, a three-year-old Syrian boy.
That image finally jolted EU leaders into action. “Syrians of course
need help, but they are not the only ones,” Di Benedetto says. Shaking
her head at the photos of dead African children on her phone, she says
she wonders whether Aylan’s “white skin” made the difference.

The possibility would be saddening, but you cannot rule it out since societies have generally favored certain groups of migrants over others for a very long time, and modern Europe is probably not an exception.